In other words, it is an authorized copy.
@civilloquy.com
In other words, it is an authorized copy.
TL;DR: Only 56% of Americans plan on taking a summer vacation this year.
For comparison:
San Diego is nice this time of year.
Anything the government produces should be in the public domain.
They're delaying AC: Shadows.
The only explanation I can come up with is that the workers and Altman both agreed in monetizing AI as much as possible. They're worried that if the board doesn't resign, the company will remain a non-profit more conservative in selling its products, so they won't get their share of the money that could be made.
This is an elegant community for a more civilized age.
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
ReactDOM.render(
<div>
<h1>My Site</h1>
<p>Welcome to my cool site. 😎</p>
</div>,
document.getElementById('root')
);
Me too. I'll take my salary now, please.
Edit: Lemmy stripped out my rickroll. :(
Doesn't npm have this already? I've definitely gotten requests for donations and various political messages when installing dependencies.
Uh, I don't think New York law provides for debtors' prisons anymore. Those went out of style in the 1700s.
The way a court actually handles an unpaid judgment is it just orders the seizure of any property the debtor does own. It doesn't need permission.
Ironically, Odysee doesn't have enough censorship for me. Like any fledgling community, the main inhabitants of any alternatives are people who aren't welcomed on mainstream social media. And I don't mean the modern "every person right of me is a Nazi". I mean a lot videos have comments calling for killing all Jews, one of the top education videos on the front page is by an occultist about how the wrong witchcraft caused 9/11, another is how the vaccines are going to start killing babies, etc.
Technically, it's fine, but who wants to post good videos or interact in a community of crazies?
If the workers actually quit and jump to Microsoft, they would be in a much worse position than they are currently in.
These were pagers specifically ordered by Hezbollah. Random civilians wouldn't have had them.
There's no finite land on the Internet. You're just as free to set up your own server today as you were 30 years ago.
No, Catholics are possibly the most consistent religion in unanimously agreeing life begins at fertilization. (Which, eggs you eat aren't fertilized anyway.)
They don't baptize stillborn "babies" because they don't believe in baptizing dead people, as it's just a body at that point, no longer a complete person. Plus they believe since there was no opportunity, there is a way to heaven for them in the afterlife.
I've only heard the "first breath" thing in a few modern sects of Judaism.
I think a Facebook competitor's critical mass problem is much harder than then a competitor to Reddit or Twitter's. The appeal to Facebook is that you have all the people you know on there, and you can share updates with the mall and see updates from them all. As the portion of your friends and loved ones drops, it's utility drops proportionally. If everyone uses Facebook, it's a great tool; but if only 10% of your friends do, it's kind of worthless. You don't really want to have to post photos to two or three different sites to really share them. Having one place to connect with everyone in your life is kind of the point of Facebook.
On the other hand, Reddit and Twitter are just random things shared from random people. If you randomly deleted half of Reddit users or Twitter users, I literally wouldn't even notice. There about the containt comma you really don't care about or even really know the actual people.
Donating to GIMP will not likely make it user-friendly enough to make me use it unless absolutely forced to. I would much rather donate to Pinta or Paint.NET or something where development would actually benefit me.
Stocks are basically a percentage of ownership. The share price as a dollar amount is meaningless because it could be 1% of a company or 0.000000001%. The relevant number here is that Reddit is IPOing at a valuation of $5 billion (that stock buys a ¹⁄₁₅₀₀₀₀₀₀₀ interest), which all I can reply with is hahahahahahahaha
thanks for using Leebra!
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